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Earlier this week, the list of what many are calling Russia's ‘political prisoners’ grew yet again. On August 28, an Other Russia [ru] activist Taisiya Osipova [ru] was sentenced to eight years in prison for drug possession — four years more than the prosecution had requested. Osipova, a diabetic mother, was originally sentenced to ten years, but her case was sent back to a district court for a retrial, after then-President Dmitri Medvedev publicized his disapproval of the sentence and promised [ru] to have state prosecutors “deal with the case.”

Osipova's new verdict has left bloggers questioning both Medvedev’s integrity and his remaining influence within the government. Opposition leader Boris Nemtsov wrote [ru] on his Facebook:

The circumstances of Osipova's arrest and imprisonment remain suspicious. Police searching her apartment committed numerous procedural violations, with only one witness. Later, that witness claimed that he saw the police planting drugs in the apartment; his words were confirmed by a lie detector test. The court, however, dismissed his testimony.

The three young women [ru] who allegedly participated in a sting operation, purchasing drugs from Osipova, are also members of pro-Kremlin youth groups NASHI and Molodaya Gvardiya. Moreover, some evidence indicates that they were elsewhere during the supposed drug-buy. While the police usually use marked bills in sting operations, only one such bill was found in her flat. Osipova's supporters argue that it was likely planted there, along with 10 grams of heroin.

Furthermore, blogger Vladislav Naganov questions [ru] whether Osipova's harsh sentence reflects standard court practices in drug-related cases. According to his research, defendants convicted of similar crimes are usually sentenced to 2-to-4 years, instead of 8:

Just recently, an organizer of a drug den near Kaliningrad (in the city of Chernyakhovsk) was sentenced to two-years probation, even though he was found guilty of illegal purchase and possession, without intent to sell.

Doubling the prison term requested by the prosecutor for a non-violent offense is the final transformation of the judicial system into a punitive one.

Why was Osipova punished so severely? Her allies, which seems to include the majority of Russian netizens, believe that the authorities framed her, in order to force her to testify [ru] against her husband, Sergei Fomchenkov, a regional leader of Other Russia. That movement — particularly its leader, Eduard Limonov — is regularly targeted by police, just as law enforcement hounded its predecessor, the National Bolsheviks. As Limonov himself wrote [ru] in his blog:

Eight years in prison for a woman with diabetes is a death sentence. They want to kill Tasya. It is noticeable to what extent sentences for natzbols [members of the National Bolsheviks] are harsher than simple repressions.

Parallels with Pussy Riot

A week before Osipova's eight-year judgment was announced, the three women from Pussy Riot were sentenced to two years in prison. The two decisions seem at odds with both legal precedent and common sense. Pussy Riot, however, has become a symbol of Russia's political opposition. Osipova's case, on the other hand, has not attracted [ru] much attention from either international or domestic audiences. Global celebrities like Paul McCartney and Madonna (who spoke out on behalf of the jailed punk rockers) have been silent about Osipova, a provincial opposition activist, who will spend four times longer behind bars for actions she may never have committed in the first place.

Thank you for your comment and thank you for reading this article. I still hope that this situation will change in Russia, otherwise we will be repeating our Stalin’s past. And this is not a type of the country we all want to live in.

Masha

This post is part of RuNet Echo, a Global Voices project to interpret the Russian language internet. All Posts · Learn more